North Wales was the place to be with the number of MMC keen to escape the big
smoke, necessitating the booking of a second bunkhouse at the eleventh hour.
As only one bunkhouse had a shower, competition for places was almost as
intense as a Stella McCartney bunfight down Topshop. Several folk pulled the
short straw including AG, Rick, Nikki, Jules and Chuck. Others called John
Bradshaw actually chose the shower-less bunkhouse!
The -4 star accommodation (upmarket, thanks only to its superior hillside
location) could only be reached after judicious use of the compass - at 320
degrees for 400 metres to be precise. A stern test for any mountaineer... JB
rose to the challenge but just as he was making his midnight approach to the
barn by following its lights, there was an inopportune power cut. Despite
immediately veering off in a different direction, his experience shone through
and after hand-railing a dry wall for the odd mile or two, JB finally arrived
at the obscure location - only to find the lights in full working order. His
only comment? Bastards!
Meanwhile in the luxury -2 star accommodation things were more straightforward
but arguably less entertaining. A certain pair encountered difficulties finding
the building however but this had nothing to do with compass work or mysterious
power cuts. On with the weekend, and what was lacking in the heating and
comfort department was thankfully made up for by the weather.
On Saturday, the sky was blue with a touch of frost on the tops - the Ogwen
valley looked stunning! As Matt later commented, his bunkhouse was grim, but it
seemed a lot better as soon as he walked out the door and saw the view. 'Top
marks for location,' he said. 'So, I picked my route for the day by it being
the first mountain I saw when I walked outside.'
Simon, Brendon, Clare, Hannah, Matt Freake, Ian, Robin, Sarah and Silvia all
agreed with Matt and after breakfast they headed out into the sunshine, no
less.
Back to Matt, 'Absolutely beautiful day and we made the most of it walking up
Carnedd Dafydd and Carnedd Llywelyn. 'Towards the end, I discovered that I'd
lost my phone. Called it on Lou's phone and it was answered by some Army guy
we'd been chatting to earlier in the day. Luckily, he was just a mile behind us
so we met up easily and got my phone back. I'm a lucky gent. Just discovered
when I got home that they took a photo of themselves too.'
A smaller party of Jules, JB, Wendy and later Rick and Nikki - also completed
the circular Carnedd ridge, lapping up the spectacular conditions. The north
ridge of Tryfan also got a look in with Chuck, Kate, Ricardo, Nick and Fiona
all bagging the summit.
Chuck particularly enjoyed scrambling up Little Tryfan but decided to back off
when, two thirds up, he found himself in the position of having to scramble
around a frozen rock climber. ( Hmmm, sounds more like K2 - ed) So back to the
luxury bunkhouse where, although the showers were warm (and there were
showers!), according to Caroline, there was also 'significant evidence' that
they were sharing their accommodation with chickens. She added that a strange
man had been spotted running around near the chickens wearing luminous attire
and a vacant expression on his face. The vacant expression apparently remained
vacant despite friendly overtures from the MMC.
Conditions were interesting in the hillside bunkhouse too where the polar
temperatures proved too much for Rick and Nikki who retreated to a B&B on the
Saturday night. And who could blame then when the B&B was above the Bryn Tyrch
pub! This left five in the uphill but not upmarket bunkhouse - and with one
degree equalling one person, the most pressing topic of conversation that night
was would temperatures plummet to a chilly five degrees with Rick and Nikki's
departure?
Sunday dawned and the weather, unbelievably, was even better than Saturday!
The MMC were raring to go - walking, running, mountain biking, working (doh!)
and faffing! In the words of Matt: 'Got up with a hangover. Spent about an hour
watching in amazement as one of the MMC's best faffs took place. At one point,
my bimbly plan of going up Little Tryfan actually had six followers. This
incidentally after Chris had got back from running the previous day's entire
route (more of this later).
People eventually got sorted. And Lou, Simon and Wendy headed out for Little
Tryfan! Then crossed the valley and bimbled in the sunshine.'
Sarah, Matt Freake, Ian and Caroline tackled a 'low level' walk, taking in Y
Garn via the Devil's Kitchen where they bumped into JB and Chris who had
scrambled up a 2 star ridge up to the summit. A good scramble, not particularly
long, but worthy of its grade and the two stars, came the verdict.
Chris was happy with the shortish route, thanks to already completing a hill
run that morning. 'Just ran the reverse of the route we walked the previous day
on the Carnedds,' he explained modestly. 'Nobody about at that time in the
morning and perfect weather, so just an amazing run! I'll leave 1 hr 55 minutes
as the target time to beat if anyone fancies a challenge!' Had they known, some
might have done. Instead, the other runners prepared for a different challenge
- the infamous Sewards' Slog.
Back on form after a decent night's sleep in their B&B, Rick and Nikki were
joined by AG and Robin on the run planned out by Rick. Billed as a 12-miler,
the trail contained an extra 3 miles - slogtastic value all agreed! Over to
Robin: 'So the promised two hour and a bit route was going well when we reached
the "half-way" point where the water bottles had been stashed. It was a pretty
flat route from Beddgelert up past the lakes of Llyn Dinas and Llyn Gwynant -
all very atmospheric being bathed in winter sunshine. 'The second half promised
a bit more hill back down a valley, which turned out to be a very long half!
You always know when you press the route organiser about the distance and it
gets longer, that it's going to be one of those days. What started at 12 miles
turned out more like 15. "Well, I hadn't straightened out the wiggles" went
Map-boy's defence!' After two and a half hours AG ran out of fuel due to not
having had a luxuriously cooked breakfast in the Bryn Tyrch - so what was
Rick's excuse, asked Nikki? Still Nikki and Robin pressed on, Nikki gaining
more strength as the time ticked past the three hour mark. Rick and AG walked
back to the car and an immediate cafe stop was the priority for all concerned
to re-hydrate (pints of tea mostly) and carbo-load with chips and chocolate
cake, reported Robin.
Further south, at Coed-y-Brenin, the mountain bikers were also earning their
cake by riding the Karrimor trail. Chuck, Kate, Ricardo, Clare, Brendon, Silvia
and Hannah had great fun avoiding tree roots and rocks. There were a couple of
small falls but it was Kate who returned with the most impressive bruise - a
war wound to be proud of!
In all, a fantastic weekend in amazing conditions - why can't North Wales be
like this every time? Thanks to Matt and Ian for supplying their pictures and
thanks to Chuck for booking a second bunkhouse.